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2022x-0578358026Blurb 2022. Paperback. New. 164 pages. 8.00x5.00x0.43 inches. Blurb paperback
0578358026.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
176630121London: For R. Cave 1766. First edition with the often-lacking errata leaf still present. 8vo in full contemporary dark mottled calf the the boards with gilt rolled frame and stippled edges the spine with nicely gilt decorated panels between flat bands each with a handsome central gilt tool black morocco label gilt lettered in one compartment marbled endpapers. 312 1 pp. An attractive copy the text very fresh and clean quite fine really the binding restored at the hinges and preserving the elegantly tooled original spine minor age evidence at the extremities. VERY SCARCE FIRST EDITION OF THIS FINE ITALIAN TRAVEL NARRATIVE BY MEANS OF LETTERS. The author a highly respected British surgeon went to Italy for reasons of health. The letters are from Venice Naples Rome Padua Florence Bologna and Turin. He gives a detailed account of the country and its people though a somewhat controversial one. The work was highly admired at home winning fans as significant as Samuel Johnson. For R. Cave hardcover
0243249896.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1867LD9712Rome: Pietro Datri 1867. Paperback. Very Good. Original pictorial wraps; oblong 4to 275x420 mm; with copper-engraved title-page and 54 views of Rome printed on the recto only. Backstrip perished; minor creasing; title-page a bit toned; last leaves dog-eared. Wide margins leave the engravings bright and clean suitable for display. Uncommon -- OCLC locates just 5 copies of the 1867 edition. <br/><br/> Pietro Datri paperback
199932296University of Michigan Press. 1999. Hardcover. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. Upper corner a bit bumped. DJ spine sunned. Else minor shelfwear.; The Papers and Monographs of the American Academy in Rome Vol. XXVII; 368 pages; Recent years have seen a welcome growth of interest in the history of early Rome. Libri Annales Pontificum Maximorum: the Origins of the Annalistic Tradition contributes important information on this period by focusing on the earliest stages of Roman historical writing. The book is once again available with a new Introduction by the author that brings the work up to date and helps place it in its current context. This book remains the starting point for study of the pre-annalistic tradition of Roman history. When first published the volume sparked a lively debate among classicists and historians of the ancient world. Previous scholarship had often assigned the pontifical chronicle a central role not only in preserving the history of the early Republic but also in shaping the form of the annalistic tradition. But the author showed that these assumptions rested on insecure foundations; to a large extent they misrepresented the historiographic development of the annalistic tradition as we know it from above all Livy and Dionysius of Halicarnassus. Perhaps the book's most controversial contention was that the final eighty-book edition of the chronicle which previous scholars had dated to the later second century BCE is more probably a massive reworking of materials in the Augustan period. This finding will likely require a considerable revision in our understanding of the development of the annalistic tradition. In the course of making these innovative arguments the author offers extensive information about the origins of the annalistic tradition and about the early history and historiography of Rome. Bruce W. Frier is Professor of Classics and Roman Law and Henry King Ransom Professor of Law University of Michigan. He has published numerous books and articles on classical and legal topics and has won the Charles J. Goodwin Award of Merit from the American Philological Association. . 0472109154 . University of Michigan Press hardcover
19994678University of Michigan Press. 1999. Hardcover. Fine in Very Good dust jacket. A couple of small tears to bottom corners of DJ else Fine.; The Papers and Monographs of the American Academy in Rome; 368 pages; Recent years have seen a welcome growth of interest in the history of early Rome. Libri Annales Pontificum Maximorum: the Origins of the Annalistic Tradition contributes important information on this period by focusing on the earliest stages of Roman historical writing. The book is once again available with a new Introduction by the author that brings the work up to date and helps place it in its current context. This book remains the starting point for study of the pre-annalistic tradition of Roman history. When first published the volume sparked a lively debate among classicists and historians of the ancient world. Previous scholarship had often assigned the pontifical chronicle a central role not only in preserving the history of the early Republic but also in shaping the form of the annalistic tradition. But the author showed that these assumptions rested on insecure foundations; to a large extent they misrepresented the historiographic development of the annalistic tradition as we know it from above all Livy and Dionysius of Halicarnassus. Perhaps the book's most controversial contention was that the final eighty-book edition of the chronicle which previous scholars had dated to the later second century BCE is more probably a massive reworking of materials in the Augustan period. This finding will likely require a considerable revision in our understanding of the development of the annalistic tradition. In the course of making these innovative arguments the author offers extensive information about the origins of the annalistic tradition and about the early history and historiography of Rome. Bruce W. Frier is Professor of Classics and Roman Law and Henry King Ransom Professor of Law University of Michigan. He has published numerous books and articles on classical and legal topics and has won the Charles J. Goodwin Award of Merit from the American Philological Association. . 0472109154 . University of Michigan Press hardcover
15-11110Reggio Emilia Italy: Libreria Prandi 2004. 8vo. 79 pp. Soft Covers Near Fine. Illustrated. Text in Italian. 758 pieces described. Reggio Emilia, Italy: Libreria Prandi, 2004. paperback
15-11109Reggio Emilia Italy: Libreria Prandi 2007. 8vo. 96 pp. Soft Covers Very Good. Illustrated. Text in Italian. 934 items described. Reggio Emilia, Italy: Libreria Prandi, 2007. paperback
15-11111Reggio Emilia Italy: Libreria Prandi 2011. 8vo. 108 pp. Soft Covers Near Fine. Plates some color. Text in Italian. 808 pieces described. Reggio Emilia, Italy: Libreria Prandi, 2011. paperback
ria9781509947553_inpHardback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; What is the licensing framework of standard essential patents SEPs for connectivity standards such as 5G and Wi-Fi How will the framework change with the Internet of Things IoT This book provides comprehensive answers to these que hardcover
0-35387Genova Barabino & Graeve 1934 depliant di sei pagine ripiegate completamente illustrato: piroscafo e fascio cartina del mondo con le linee di collegamento immagini delle navi Rex Conte di Savoia Roma Conte Grande Duilio Saturnia Oceania Victoria Conte Rosso. Elenco delle crociere e cartolina postale staccabile. unknown
199139758Journal of Roman Archaeology. 1991. Hardcover. Fine in No Dust Jacket dust jacket. Contents: Tim Cornell: The tyranny of the evidence: a discussion of the possible uses of literacy in Etruria and Latiumin the archaic age; Mary Beard: Ancient literacy and the function of the written word in Roman religion; Nicholas Horsfall: Statistics or states of mind ; James L. Franklin Jr. : Literacy and the parietal inscriptions of Pompeii; Mireille Corbier: L’ecriture en quête de lecteurs; Alan K. Bowman: Literacy in the Roman empire: mass and mode; Keith Hopkins: Conquest by book. Ann Ellis Hanson: Ancient illiteracy; Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series #3; 198 pages . 1887829032 . Journal of Roman Archaeology hardcover
199127435Journal of Roman Archaeology. 1991. Hardcover. Very Good in No Dust Jacket dust jacket. Light foxing to textblock.; Contents: Tim Cornell: The tyranny of the evidence: a discussion of the possible uses of literacy in Etruria and Latiumin the archaic age; Mary Beard: Ancient literacy and the function of the written word in Roman religion; Nicholas Horsfall: Statistics or states of mind ; James L. Franklin Jr. : Literacy and the parietal inscriptions of Pompeii; Mireille Corbier: L’ecriture en quête de lecteurs; Alan K. Bowman: Literacy in the Roman empire: mass and mode; Keith Hopkins: Conquest by book. Ann Ellis Hanson: Ancient illiteracy; Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series #3; 198 pages . 1887829032 . Journal of Roman Archaeology hardcover
1528115821.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
197728688Princeton University Press. 1977. Hardcover. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. Book has minor shelfwear. Scholar's bookplate to inner cover G. P. Goold. Foxing to top of textblock. DJ has minor edgewear.; Luce Considers to what extent Livy may be said to have been in control of his historical material. What is the significance the author asks of the units by which Livy structured his history How did he go about preparing himself to write and what methods did he use in the course of actual composition Did he have an interpretation of his own concerning the overall course of Roman History and if so how did it affect his selection and arrangement of material; 322 pages . 0691035520 . Princeton University Press hardcover
197719792Princeton University Press. 1977. Hardcover. Very Good in Good dust jacket. Minor shelfwear to book. Spine ends sunned and a bit discolored. Scholar's blindstamp and name to ffep Robert Brown. DJ has chipping and a few tears with 2 cm torn strip at top of spine. Rubbing to DJ spine with a bit of colour loss.; Luce Considers to what extent Livy may be said to have been in control of his historical material. What is the significance the author asks of the units by which Livy structured his history How did he go about preparing himself to write and what methods did he use in the course of actual composition Did he have an interpretation of his own concerning the overall course of Roman History and if so how did it affect his selection and arrangement of material; 322 pages . 0691035520 . Princeton University Press hardcover
197711701Princeton University Press. 1977. Hardcover. Very Good in Good dust jacket. Minor shelfwear to book. Spine ends very slightly discolored. DJ has chipping to spine ends with small piece chipped off to heel. DJ has 1 small tear to upper corner. Edgewear to extremities.; Luce Considers to what extent Livy may be said to have been in control of his historical material. What is the significance the author asks of the units by which Livy structured his history How did he go about preparing himself to write and what methods did he use in the course of actual composition Did he have an interpretation of his own concerning the overall course of Roman History and if so how did it affect his selection and arrangement of material; 322 pages . 0691035520 . Princeton University Press hardcover
192055526Genova: Edizione de "La Comune" / Tipografia Ligure 1920. Second edition. Octavo 23cm x 17cm. Pictorial paper wrappers; 1178pp. Slight raggedness and small losses to paper on spine partially obscuring title else a fresh Very Good or better copy. With a Preface by Gino Piastra and an "Introductory Monologue" by "Right" pseud. Text entirely in Italian.<br /> <br /> Extremely uncommon anarchist drama set among a community of striking rice-workers in rural Italy. Tomaso Concordia dates uncertain; active ca 1910-1950 is described by Massimo Ortalli as a "shoemaker from Vercelli" among the group of "militant autodidacts" who did much to develop Italian proletarian social drama in the 1910s and 20s see Rivista Anarchica anno 34 n.298 Apr 2004. Concordia also penned a drama on the death of Francisco Ferrer Il Martirio di Francesco Ferrer 1947 and a number of popular and theoretical works on anarchism. This title catalogued but not located in OCLC though we note five locations in Italy including several for the first edition Biella: 1911. Edizione de "La Comune" / Tipografia Ligure unknown
919187-nnew. unknown
919187like new. unknown
0656872438.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
70-0391Cinisello Balsamo Milano : Silvana Editoriale 2017. 4to. 56 pp. Hard Cover. Very Good. Blue cloth covered boards. Color plates throughout. Text in Italian and English. ISBN: 9788836638079 8836638074.The book 'Love' accompanies the eponymous exhibition at the Collezione Maramotti. A richly imaginative journey through Luisa Rabbia's work between 2009 and 2017 with an essay by Mario Diacono traces the primary elements of her art: the use of the color blue and fingerprints; interior dimensions that slide into the social; the connection between human beings and their surrounding environment. Cinisello Balsamo, Milano : Silvana Editoriale, 2017. hardcover
2025__1538190702Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2025. Hardcover. New. 343 pages. 9.25x6.25x1.25 inches. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers hardcover
15391910010019Lucae : Joannes Baptista Phaellus 1539. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. 16th Century Italian Criminal Law Lovely example of early Tuscan printing. Folio 34 cm. Bound in full vellum with manuscript spine lettering. Some worming to spine. Marginal dampstaining. Woodcut bordered title page. Final 3L6 woodcut only of arms of Lucca wanting. Broad-margined copy. Roman types. Early inscription of Paolo Antonio Parensi of Lucca 1727. Adams L-1593. Based on the city code of 1446 the code was revised in 1527. Note: This copy sold at Swann's Galleries in 1983 Sale 1295 lot 195. <br> This is an oversized or heavy book which requires additional postage for international delivery outside the US. Lucae : Joannes Baptista Phaellus hardcover